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[Commlist] Symposium The art press today
Wed Jan 05 21:09:51 GMT 2022
Please note that the deadline for submission proposals for the
international symposium “The art press today, towards a reconfiguration
of a media genre?” has been extended *to January 31*^st *, 2022*.
The conference will be held on May 9^th and 10^th , 2022 at Université
Panthéon-Assas in Paris.
Topics of research and guidelines for application are specified below.
Papers can be submitted in both French and English and sent at
(presseculturelle2022 /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(presseculturelle2022 /at/ gmail.com)>.
No payments from the authors will be required to attend the conference.
++++++++++
*THE ART PRESS TODAY: TOWARDS A RECONFIGURATION OF A MEDIA GENRE?*
**
*9-10, May 2022*
*Université Paris II Panthéon-Assas,*
*391, rue de Vaugirard, 75015 Paris*
*Paris, France*
****
**
**
Nowadays, the cultural press can take a variety of formats and aspects,
depending on the angle chosen, the readership or the specific issues
being tackled: a well-reputed journal like /Artforum/; a generalist
magazine like /ArtNews/, a cultural guide such as /Time Out/ or a single
medium-targeted publication like /Film Quaterly/. Going beyond those
paper publications, one also has to encounter the great variety of
online publications, from blogs to podcasts and e-magazines or cultural
pure players (such as /ArtViewer/).
This international symposium has the ambition of shedding light on this
broad spectrum and outline the different ways in which media (both
traditional and digital) can examine and write about visual arts,
architecture, graphic design, cinema, music, literature, and so on.
Papers may also focus on cultural industries (video games, movies,
television shows…).
Furthermore, the art press, whose print runs are often low and
readership somewhat specialized, deserves to be analysed through the
scope of media studies and with the help of info-communicational tools.
Indeed, this particular segment of the media has a lot to teach us about
collective representations, beliefs and values given to contemporary
art, cultural practices and ways of debating in society around it.
Papers may tackle any aspect of artistic or cultural activity.
Our goal in this conference is to implement an interdisciplinary
approach to the matter of the artistic and cultural press. This
conference also intends to encourage exchanges between researchers and
actors from the media and artistic fields, in order to allow for
discussions at the intersection of practical and theoretical viewpoints.
Scholars and practitioners from various disciplines and approaches
(history, media and communication studies, art history, literature,
sociology, etc.) are welcome to submit abstracts for papers dealing
critically with one or several of the following topics.
**
***1 – Historical models and influences*
**
This first line of research intends to question the variety of editorial
forms that the “art journal”, the “cultural magazine” or the “cultural
news magazine” can adopt. If a very rich bibliography is devoted to
artistic and cultural periodicals of the XIX^th and the first half of
the XX^th centuries^^[1] <#_ftn1>, the more recent period is often
excluded from these studies that are privileging a chronological and
diachronic approach. Periodicals that focus on the contemporary art
world is thus a territory that is yet to be explored. This first axis
intends to encourage reflections on the filiation of this rich editorial
heritage by insisting on the contemporary period.
It is then necessary to take a deeper look at examples of magazines that
are currently being published, so as to wonder which models they derive
from, which filiation they are the fruit of. Studies on long lasting
periodicals such as /Art in America/ (founded in 1912) are welcome.
Papers in this section might take a monographic and historical
perspective, question art journals over time, or consider memorable
titles that have been decisive for more recent journals. Papers may also
engage a transnational or trans-media perspective.**
*2 – Diversification of online editorial forms***
**
How do art journals manage to explore new territories, especially
digital ones? Cultural magazines are nowadays extended by blogs,
webzines, accounts on social networks, collaborative platforms,
audio-visual formats such as podcasts or filmed interviews, and so on.
Art journals and magazines are thus rapidly moving away from the
traditional paper model and heading towards a greater variety of
formats, starting with the exploration of a digital/paper
complementarity. Let us mention the French blog /Jeunes Critiques d'art/
(Young Art Critics), podcasts such as /Le bruit de l'art/, webzines like
the Italian /Cura/ or the American /Triple Canopy/, amateur websites
such as /Sens critique/ for movies. We can also mention hybrid formats
offered by certain social networks and digital platforms such as the
Twitch channels ("The Blank Contemporary Art"), Instagram accounts,
YouTube channels, etc.
To what extent are digital devices the result of editorial experiments?
Papers in this section might focus on case studies and rely on the
analysis of socio-technical devices that allow a diversification of
cultural consumption. Papers may also focus on the reconfiguration of
journalistic practices of art criticism and the adaptability of
magazines to the digital world, their editorial line and the formats
they use.
**
**
**
*3 – Editorial and discursive norms: from specificity to adaptation*
**
The specificity of the terms "review", "journal" or "magazine" when
considered through the lens of art press is yet to be determined,
especially in a context where the obsolescence of art criticism is more
and more often pointed out. However, this type of press is remarkably
vivid, on a local as well as on an international scale. Although the art
world is facing important mutations and issues (financial speculation,
globalization, or more recently the Covid-19 crisis), the most
established formats – starting with the exhibition review or the
interview with an artist – are remarkably resisting and adapting to this
moving context. How does the art press position itself /vis-à-vis/ other
genres of the press, and other types of discourse on art (institutional,
academic)? Are there specificities inherent to cultural media?
Papers may explore the editorial norms most commonly adopted by art
journals, whether printed or online, as well as their evolution in order
to question the values that underlie them. Graphic design, layout,
rubric, editorial line... What are the formats, the editorial standards
most characteristic of the art journal? In what ways do they evolve, in
the face of the adaptation of titles to digital formats and to economic
and social imperatives? In what ways do these norms adapt to such a
diversification?
**
*4 – The art press in the “expanded field”^*^[2] * <#_ftn2>*
****
The cultural press seems to be torn between, on the one hand, a
democratization of its contents and a hybridization of its forms (with,
in particular, news magazine, fashion magazine, news bulletin...), and
on the other hand an increasing fragmentation. This is made evident with
the great increase of periodicals more and more specialized, dedicated
to specific mediums even within the field of visual arts, such as
drawing (/Roven/), amateur practices (/Profane/), or the youth of renown
artists (/L’incroyable/). Increasingly strong constraints weigh on the
exercise of cultural criticism, and consequently on the editorial
production of reviews: increase in the number of exhibitions and art
shows, internationalization of artistic trajectories, financial
pressure, lack of means for public institutions, etc. Those are some of
the many elements which come to complicate the task of art critics, who
face important issues of payment and independence. Art criticism as a
whole is threatened by the pitfall of “cultural promotion”^^[3]
<#_ftn3>: when advertisers (art galleries, foundations, etc.) finance a
publication by the purchase of advertising spaces, the critic, as well
as the magazine in which he/she publishes, can experience pressure to
value and promote the advertiser in question. Moreover, with reviews
financed and published by institutions as /Palais/ (Palais de Tokyo in
Paris) or /Les Cahiers du MNAM/ (published by the MNAM-Centre Georges
Pompidou, Paris), the art review appears as essential to uncover
mechanisms and networks structuring the artistic network and the values
which determine its organization. However, in spite of these various
pitfalls, the sector of the cultural press is dynamic and diversified,
constitutes an attractive pole for journalists and often arouses
professional aspirations. The vitality of free magazines, such as in
France /Zérodeux/ or /Le Châssis/, is a good witness of this phenomenon.
Papers in this section could focus on the economic models of the art
press and the strategies deployed to ensure its sustainability, as well
as the different factors that allow the cultural press to fight against
competition, especially that of the general press. Submissions may also
underline the relations of collaboration, competition, or even
“coopétition”^^[4] <#_ftn4>of the art magazines with each other, as well
as in their networking within the art world (galeries, museums), and
beyond: mainstream media, creative industries.
Last but not least, the recent Covid-19 crisis calls to question the
ways critics from the cultural sector have accommodated their practices
with the mutations of cultural agenda during quarantine.
**
***Bibliography*
**
ALLEN Gwen (dir.), /The Magazine/, London, MIT Press « Documents for
Contemporary Art », 2016
BAUDOIN Jean et HOURMANT François (dir.), /Les Revues et la dynamique
des ruptures/, Rennes, Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2007
BOIVENT Marie, /La Revue d’artiste, enjeu et spécificité d’une pratique
artistique/, Rennes, Incertain sens, 2015
BONACORSI Julia et CROISSANT Valérie, « "Votre mémoire culturelle" :
entre logistique numérique de la recommandation et médiation
patrimoniale. Le cas de /Sens Critique/ », /Études de communication/,
2015/2, n° 45, p. 129-148
BOURE Robert, « Sociologie des revues de sciences sociales et humaines
», /Réseaux, /n° 58, 1993, p. 91-105
BOURGATTE Michaël, « Pour une analyse informatisée de la critique de
cinéma. Ce que dit la critique de la structure du champ
cinématographique », /Questions de communication/, 2017/1, n° 31, p. 315-333
CHÈVREFILS-DESBIOLLES Yves et FROISSART-PEZONE Rossella (dir.), /Les
revues d’art/, Rennes, Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2011
COLOMINA Beatriz, /Clip, Stamp, Fold: The Radical Architecture of Little
Magazines, 196X to 197X/, Barcelone, Actar, 2010
CORPET Olivier, FRANCK Thomas et GLORIE Caroline, « La revue comme
discours d’intervention », /Cahiers du GRM/, 12/2017 [En ligne], URL :
<https://journals.openedition.org/grm/1055>https://journals.openedition.org/grm/1055
<https://journals.openedition.org/grm/1055>
CROISSANT Valérie (dir.), /L’avis des autres./ /Prescription et
recommandation culturelle à l’ère numériqu/e, Éditions des archives
contemporaines, 2019
CROISSANT Valérie et SPANO William, /Le journalisme en miroir dans la
presse culturelle lyonnaise au XIX^e siècle/, /Le Temps des médias.
//Revue d’histoire/, vol 23, n° 2, 2014, p. 165‑181
DA COSTA KAUFMANN Thomas, DOSSIN Catherine et JOYEUX-PRUNEL Béatrice
(dir.), /Circulations in the Global History of a Art/, Londres,
Routledge, 2015
HEIN Fabien, « Le critique rock, le fanzine et le magazine ; ça s’en va
et ça revient », /Volume/, n°5 , 2006, p. 83-106
JOYEUX-PRUNEL Béatrice, /Les avant-gardes artistiques. Une histoire
transnationale. Volume 1 (1848-1918) ; Volume 2 (1918-1945)/,//Paris,
Gallimard, 2016 et 2017
LEENAERTS Danielle, /Petite histoire du magazine VU (1928-1940). Entre
photographie d’information et photographie d’art/, Bruxelles, PIE Peter
Lang, 2010
NEWMAN Amy, /Challenging Art: Artforum 1962-1974/, New York, Soho Press,
2000
REGIMBEAU Gérard, « Les index des revues d’art contemporain : outils
documentaires et documents ». Actes du séminaire annuel « Les revues de
sciences humaines et sociales : évolutions et figures », 1996, p. 37-50,
[En ligne], URL : https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00605217v2
<https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00605217v2>
STEAD Evanghelia et VÉDRINE Hélène (dirs.), /L’Europe des revues
(1880-1920). Estampes, photographies, illustrations/, Paris, Presses
Universitaires Paris Sorbonne, 2008
STEAD Evanghelia,/Sisyphe heureux. Les revues artistiques et
littéraires : approches et figures, /Rennes, Presses Universitaires de
Rennes, 2020
TRIGGS Teal, /Fanzines/, Londres, Thames & Hudson, 2010
WEBB Sheila, "Magazines and the visual arts: the ideal showcase", in
ABRAHAMSON David et PRIOR-MILLER Maria R., /The Routledge Handbook of
Magazine ResearchThe Future of the Magazine Form/,//New York, Routledge,
2015, p. 347-361
**
**
*Guidelines*
**
●**On the first page of your document, please state your paper’s title
and a short bio (100 words) specifying your name, institutional
affiliation and e-mail address.
●Your abstract (300 words) is to be sent in .doc or .odt format to
(presseculturelle2022 /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(presseculturelle2022 /at/ gmail.com)>,
by *January 31^st , 2022.*
Members of the scientific committee will anonymously peer-review the
abstracts.
A peer-reviewed volume of a selection of papers will follow the conference.
*Agenda*
*Launch for abstracts*
*20/10/2021*
*Last day to submit abstracts*
*31/01/2022*
*Notification of acceptance or refusal*
*25/02/2022*
*Symposium*
*9-10/05/2022*
**
***Organizing committee: *Lucie ALEXIS, Assistant Professor, Université
Grenoble Alpes, Institut de la Communication et des Médias, GRESEC,
associate researcher with Institut national de l’audiovisuel and CARISM;
Flore DI SCIULLO, PhD in Communication and media studies, ATER,
Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, Institut Français de Presse,
associate researcher with CARISM.
*Scientific committee: *BLANDIN Claire (Professor, Université Sorbonne
Paris Nord, LabSIC); BOIVENT Marie (Assistant Professor, Université
Rennes 2, laboratoire PTAC); BULLICH Vincent (Assistant Professor,
Université Grenoble Alpes, GRESEC); CROISSANT Valérie (Assistant
Professor, Université Lyon 2, ELICO); DESEILLIGNY Oriane (Assistant
Professor, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord, GRIPIC); DESMET Nathalie
(Curator, Assistant Professor, Université Paris 8, AIAC); DEVILLARD
Valérie (Professor, Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, CARISM); LAFON
Benoît (Professor, Université Grenoble Alpes, GRESEC); LAMBERT Frédéric
(Professor, Université Paris 2, CARISM); MOURATIDOU Eleni(Assistant
Professor, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord, LabSIC); STEAD Evanghelia
(Professor, USVQ, CHCSC); RIEFFEL Rémy (Professor, Université Paris 2
Panthéon-Assas, CARISM); RINGOOT Roselyne (Professor, Université
Grenoble Alpes, GRESEC); SAEMMER Alexandra, (Professor, Université Paris
8, CEMTI); WRONA Adeline (Professor, Université Paris IV, GRIPIC).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
^^[1] <#_ftnref1>See in France scholars seminars dedicated to that
matter, such as "PÉLIAS : Les périodiques comme médiateurs culturels
(Littérature, arts, sciences)" :
http://msh-paris-saclay.fr/event/seminaire-pelias-periodiques-litterature-arts-sciences-les-periodiques-comme-mediateurs-culturels/
<http://msh-paris-saclay.fr/event/seminaire-pelias-periodiques-litterature-arts-sciences-les-periodiques-comme-mediateurs-culturels/>organized
by Alexia Kalantzis, Norbert Verdier et Hélène Védrine”, or "TIGRE
(Texte-Image, groupe de recherche à l’École)
<https://www.uvsq.fr/quinzieme-seminaire-du-tigre-texte-image-groupe-de-recherche-a-lecole-2020-2021>",
chaired by Evanghelia Stead, online collaborative projects and
databases like the "Modernist Journals Project <https://modjourn.org/>".
See also Scholarly Societies like“Research Society for Victorian
Periodicals <https://rs4vp.org/>” or "ESPRit – European Society for
Periodical Research <https://www.espr-it.eu/>".
^^[2] <#_ftnref2>This concept of “expanded field”is derived from
Rosalind Krauss in her famous article "Sculpture in the Expanded Field",
p. 277-290 /in/ Rosalind Krauss/, The Originality of the Avant-Garde and
Other Modernist Myths /[1984], Cambridge, MIT Press. This term was then
used in different contexts. See for instance its appropriation by the
art critics of the german magazine /Texte zur Kunst /: Catherine
Chevalier, Andreas Fohr (dir.), /Une anthologie de la revue Texte Zur
Kunst de 1990 à 1998/, Dijon, Les Presses du réel, 2010.
^^[3] <#_ftnref3>Cf. Matthieu Béra, « Critique d’art ou promotion
culturelle ? », /Réseaux/, n°117, 2003/1, p. 153-187.
^^[4] <#_ftnref4>This term combining « competition” and”cooperation”was
coined by the businessman Ray Noorda and gained popularity throughout
the 1990s. See for instance: Nalebuff & Brandeburger, /Coopetition/, /A
Revolution Mindset that Combines Competition and Cooperation/, New York,
Crown Businness, 1996.
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